
The fat acid in the meat is the same quality as in wild oily fish their butter has CLA (that an ongoing French investigation, since 1977, is finding evidence it fights cancer) and the fat in the milk has the long chain carbon atoms children need to develop the brain – we are talking non-homogenized whole milk here!! The flavours of Fjällnära are very popular with top chefs in Sweden. Governments and health police must cease categorizing all meat as the same – pasture grazed Fjällnära, and other such grass fed heritage landrace ruminants, are as far removed from feedlot cattle and industrialized agriculture as life on Mars!! We had the opportunity to watch their Fjällnära forest grazing in small family groups, and the Jamtget and Hedemora hens happy in their natural habitats – no intensive farming here!! If more folk experienced animals being ethically reared in harmony with nature they would understand the vast differences there are in food production. They very kindly put us up in the old village schoolhouse, not in use since 1936, and as swallows circled and hens roosted we slept like a couple of logs! It was the first time I had tried it – you won’t see it on restaurant menus – and it was like crème caramel although even better! The BBQ was fired up and we enjoyed marinaded pork from a neighbour’s farm with herbed potatoes and salad – truly a meal fit for kings. (Please note this is what is surplus to the calf’s requirements so no-one is denied!).

The kitchen, whilst hygge, has racks for milk pails and mixers, cream separator and all the equipment for passionate cooks! We dined on ‘ Kalvdans’ that is first milk, colostrum, filled in a shallow form and slowly baked in a warm oven. The farm dates from the 1850’s and is in the process of being lovingly restored with many original features, colours and furnishings.

What they call in Sweden a ‘ smultron ställe,’ strawberry patch, a very special place. When business was done and dusted we were all invited to the village of Hoberg 9km up a single track road into the forest. Washed down with lashings of lingon saft it was a traditional and tasty start to our meetings.Īs many of the genebank Fjällnära are reared by enthusiasts who have other rare breeds, meetings are often grouped and today was the AGM for goats too: Jamtget, Göingeget and Lappget. It would have been the staple food of the charcoal makers who worked here up until WW2. The Fjällnära meetings are always in wonderful places and today is no exception! The fires are blazing and long-handled pans sizzled with Kol Bullar, an old bread recipe using rye or six row barley with fat pork in the mix. Skattlösaberg is now an open air museum in nature, scattered with fäbods and stugor and birthplace of Dan Andersson, the famous poet.
Smultron stalle free#
Onwards through stunning landscape – cranes courting and sheep grazing with their lambs until we arrive at Skattlösaberg, ‘no tax mountain’ so called as it was tax free 400 years ago to encourage Finns to come as settlers in Sweden to populate lands that were under threat of a takeover bid from Danes! As good as before, they offer granolas and fools, smoothies and fruit hams, cheeses and herring eggs, bacon and meatballs, all beautifully presented with multiple coffees for 100SK. On our eight hour journey north to the northern region of southern Sweden (work that one out!) we paused at an excellent café we recalled from our last trip, Restaurang Brandasen at Hallsberg. We are here for the AGM’s of the Fjällnära cows of which Bosse is Vice Chair, and the old landrace goats.
Smultron stalle full#
Spring passed in a wink and blossoms are already in full bloom. Three weeks ago there was snow in Dalarna and now it is 25 degrees. As such seats are a premium, please don’t no show or overcommit a seat as you destroy the ambience for everyone and ultimately cost someone financially whose trying to innovate not imitate.It is a sweltering day in May. It’s unique, experimental and educational and should be lauded in Birmingham like our Michelin starred food offerings. Rob your host and drinks guide introduces each drinks dish from set menus with knowledge and precision, depending on the room dynamics (most times I’ve visited it’s groups of two) allows for shared conversations of the experience. Having visited on several occasions, this is great for a foodie or more discerning drinker who prefers quality over quantity. An ever changing concept menus feels like a drinks journey using unusual ingredients and textures, no two experiences are ever the same.

Collaborating with both creative chefs and cutting edge fellow bartenders from around the UK this is more of an immersive fusion of flavours, a ‘drinks experience’ orientated 2 hours akin to Aviary in Chicago.
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An adventure to find it and with only 8 seats you feel like you’ve been invited to an intimate dinner party hosted by a Michelin starred ‘liquid’ chef.
